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Tiger Reserve | Ancient Fort

Bandhavgarh National Park

The Tiger's Fortress

Madhya Pradesh

Image: User:Archith / CC BY-SA 3.0
Monsoon Closure
The park is closed from July 1 to September 30 every year due to monsoon rains.
High Demand
Tala zone (best for tigers) has limited daily permits. Book 90-120 days in advance, especially for October-March season.

Plan Your Visit

Welcome to Bandhavgarh National Park! Use the resources below to plan your adventure in one of India's most treasured wild spaces.

Reservations

Book safari permits through the Madhya Pradesh forest booking portal.

Lodging

Tala Village
Numerous resorts and lodges around Tala gate including Tiger's Den, Nature Heritage Resort, and MP Tourism's White Tiger Forest Lodge.
Luxury
Mahua Kothi (Taj), Kings Lodge, and Tree House Hideaway offer premium safari experiences.
Budget
Several budget guesthouses in Tala village. Basic but functional, with easy access to the park gate.

Book your stay

Browse stays in Umaria Booking.com

This link opens Booking.com, a third-party site.

Visitor Centers

Tala Gate Reception
Tala Village • 5:30 AM - 5:30 PM
Main entry point for permits, guide assignment, and park information.

Rules & Regulations

  • Stay in the vehicle at all times during safari
  • No honking or loud noise
  • Do not feed animals
  • Plastic is prohibited
  • Wear muted earth-tone colors
  • Follow guide instructions strictly
  • No smoking or alcohol in the park

Accessibility

Jeep safaris on maintained forest roads. Terrain is hilly and roads can be bumpy. Fort trek involves steep climbing. The Tala gate area is accessible. Most resorts have accessible ground-floor rooms.

Basic Information

About This Park

Bandhavgarh National Park in Madhya Pradesh boasts the highest density of Bengal tigers in India, making it arguably the best place in the country for tiger sightings. The park is dominated by the Bandhavgarh Fort, perched atop a 811-meter hill — an ancient citadel with origins dating back over 2,000 years, mentioned in the Narada-Panch Ratra. The varied terrain of steep ridges, open meadows, sal forests, and bamboo thickets creates ideal tiger habitat. The legendary white tigers of Rewa were first discovered in this region in 1951, and the park's tigers continue to captivate wildlife enthusiasts from around the world.

Operating Hours & Seasons

SeasonMorning SafariEvening Safari
Winter (Oct - Feb)6:00 AM - 11:00 AM2:00 PM - 5:30 PM
Summer (Mar - Jun)5:30 AM - 10:30 AM2:30 PM - 6:00 PM

Three zones: Tala (best for tigers), Magdhi, and Khitauli. Tala zone is most popular and fills up first. Wednesday afternoon safaris are closed.

Closure PeriodJuly 1 - September 30 (monsoon season).

Fees & Passes

CategoryAmount
Entry Fee (Indian)INR 80 per person
Entry Fee (Foreigner)INR 1,600 per person
Jeep Safari (Indian)INR 4,500 - 6,500 per trip
Jeep Safari (Foreigner)INR 9,000 - 12,000 per trip
Elephant SafariINR 2,500 per person (when available)
Guide FeeINR 500 per trip (mandatory)

Tala zone commands a premium and fills up months in advance. Magdhi and Khitauli zones offer good wildlife but lower tiger density. Book through MP Online portal.

Weather

☀️ Summer
March - June
28°C - 46°C
Extremely hot. Best tiger sighting season — sparse vegetation and animals at waterholes. Carry lots of water and sun protection.
🌧️ Monsoon
July - September
22°C - 35°C
Heavy rainfall. Park closed. Lush green landscape. Roads may be damaged by rain.
❄️ Winter
October - February
3°C - 28°C
Pleasant days, cold mornings. Good overall season. December-January mornings can be very cold — warm layers essential for open jeep safaris.

Contact Information

Phone
+91-7653-265314
Authority
Field Director, Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve, Umaria, Madhya Pradesh

Directions & Transportation

Physical Address

Bandhavgarh National Park, Umaria District, Madhya Pradesh 484661

23.7227° N, 80.9693° E

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By Air

Nearest airport is Jabalpur (195 km, 4.5 hours) or Khajuraho (240 km, 5 hours). Both have flights from Delhi and Mumbai.

🚂

By Train

Nearest railway station is Umaria (35 km), on the Katni-Bilaspur line. Directly connected to Delhi (Mahakaushal Express), Kolkata, and other cities. Katni Junction (100 km) is a larger station on the Mumbai-Howrah main line.

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By Road

195 km from Jabalpur (4.5 hours), 240 km from Khajuraho (5 hours), 200 km from Satna. Well-maintained state highway. Taxis available from Umaria and Jabalpur.

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Local Transport

Safari jeeps arranged through hotels or the park gate at Tala village. The Tala zone gate is the main entry. Tala village has restaurants and shops. Auto-rickshaws available in Tala.

Things to Do

🚙
Jeep Safari
Morning and evening safaris through Tala, Magdhi, and Khitauli zones. Bandhavgarh has the highest tiger sighting success rate among all Indian parks.
🏰
Fort Visit
Trek to the ancient Bandhavgarh Fort (permission required) to see 2,000-year-old cave inscriptions, a Vishnu statue, and panoramic views of the park.
🐘
Elephant Safari
Short elephant-back rides for close-up tiger viewing when tigers are located by trackers. Subject to availability.
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Bird Watching
Over 250 species including White-rumped Vulture, Paradise Flycatcher, and Changeable Hawk-Eagle.
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Cave Paintings
See ancient rock paintings and inscriptions in caves around the fort dating back to the 1st century AD.

Nature & Wildlife

Key Wildlife

Bengal TigerIndian LeopardSloth BearGaurSambarChitalWild BoarIndian FoxOver 250 bird species

Flora

Sal forests covering nearly 50% of the park, mixed deciduous forests on hillslopes, bamboo thickets in valleys, and open grasslands (chakradhara and rajbhera meadows). Teak, Arjun, Mahua, and Tendu are common.

Fauna

Approximately 80-100 Bengal tigers — the highest density in India. Also home to leopards, sloth bears, gaur, sambar, chital, wild boar, porcupines, and Indian foxes. The park was the original home of the famous white tigers of Rewa.

Learn About the Park

History

The Bandhavgarh Fort is believed to be over 2,000 years old, with the earliest human habitation dating to 1st century cave inscriptions. The name means 'Brother's Fort' — legend says Lord Rama gave this fort to his brother Lakshmana after conquering Lanka. The forests were the hunting grounds of the Maharajas of Rewa. In 1951, Maharaja Martand Singh captured a white tiger cub (Mohan) here, sparking the famous lineage of white tigers. The area became a national park in 1968 and a tiger reserve in 1993.

Quick Facts

Established
1968
Area
716 sq km
State
Madhya Pradesh
Designation
Tiger Reserve

References

  1. Bandhavgarh National Park official visitor information Field Director, Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve, Umaria, Madhya Pradesh
  2. Book MP Tourism stays near Bandhavgarh Madhya Pradesh Tourism
  3. Book MP forest safari permits Madhya Pradesh Forest Department
  4. Bandhavgarh National Park location map OpenStreetMap contributors
  5. Bandhavgarh National Park thumbnail image source Wikimedia Commons